Background

Technical assessment of pressure measurement devices (PMDs) should guarantee for their appropriate use in the clinics. The study aims at proving the validity of the assessment methodology ISS proposed [
1], and at quantifying the impact of PMD performance on clinical assessment.

Materials and methods

Three commercial PMDs were first assessed and then compared during barefoot walking: PMDa and PMDb - resistive technology, 1sens/cm
2 – were assessed on-site, while PMDc – capacitive technology, 4sens/cm
2 - was tested on-the-bench and on-site [
1]. The PMDs were aligned on the floor to capture successive at-regimen steps of the left foot of one trained volunteer; 10 complete steps were acquired in both directions for each PMD; data were temporally normalised and averaged; main kinetic parameters were extracted.

Results

Preliminary results (Table
1 and Figure
1): i) PMDc resulted accurate and was used as a reference; ii) PMDa was found inaccurate on-site and delivered unreliable gait data; iii) PMDb was found accurate on-site but performed significantly worse than PMDc during gait.

Table 1

Results from the on-the-bench and on-site assessment, and with respect to some clinically relevant parameters.

* statistically different from PMDc corresponding data (p<0.05, also verified with respect to the ± 5% maximum error); ** statistically different from PMDb and PMDc corresponding data (p<0.05, also verified with respect to the ± 5% maximum error)

Conclusions

To conclude: i) on-site assessment up to 250kPa proved to be necessary but not sufficient to guarantee for a good PMD performance during gait; ii) a thorough on-the-bench assessment is effective and recommended; iii) use of PMDb data might be misleading in research and risky in the clinics. The study is going on with the comparison among other commercial PMDs and under a wide range of testing conditions.

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